1. Riomaggiore - Cinque Terre, Italy
2. Keukenhof Tulip Gardens - Lisse,Holland
3. Son Doong Cave - Vietnam
4. Tunnel of Love in Kleven - Ukraine
5. Terraced Rice Field - Yunnan, China
6. Salt Desert of Uyuni - Bolivia
7. Sagano Bamboo Grove - Japan
8. Pamukkale Travertine Pools - Turkey
9. Cenotes - Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico
10. Skogarfoss Waterfall - Iceland
11. Palominito Island - Puerto Rico
2. Keukenhof Tulip Gardens - Lisse,Holland
3. Son Doong Cave - Vietnam
4. Tunnel of Love in Kleven - Ukraine
5. Terraced Rice Field - Yunnan, China
6. Salt Desert of Uyuni - Bolivia
7. Sagano Bamboo Grove - Japan
8. Pamukkale Travertine Pools - Turkey
9. Cenotes - Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico
10. Skogarfoss Waterfall - Iceland
11. Palominito Island - Puerto Rico
source Heavens On Earth, Nice n Funny
12. Isle of Skye - Scotland
13. Dunn's River Falls - Jamaica
14. Sea Caves - Benagil, Portugal
15. Capilano Suspension Bridge - Vancouver, British Columbia
16. Lucca - Italy
17. Ilhéu da Vila - Portugal
18. San Marco - Venice, Italy
19. Thor's Well - Cape Perpetua, Oregon , USA
20. Maldives
21. Lake Powell - Utah, USA
22. Six Senses Yao Noi - Thailand
23. Portillo Ski Resort - Chile
24. Lofoten - Norway
25. El Escorial, Madrid - Spain
source Heavens On Earth, Nice n Funny
National Geographic - 1339 Years Old City Under The Lake
Chinese National Geographic magazine published a series of exquisite pictures about Shicheng City (literally, Lion City) in February. Shicheng city, nearly 1,339 years of age, situated in east China’s Zhejiang Province, has been submerged under Qiandao Lake since 1959 and the construction of the Xin’an River Hydropower Station.
Shicheng City was named after the Wu Shi Mountain (literally, Five Lion Mountain) in the northern part of Sui’an County, Zhejiang. It was once the center of politics, economics and culture of Sui’an County in that area.
A Stunning Tunnel Of Lights
Photo credit: André Sato
This stunning tunnel of lights is open till March 31, 2013 at the Nabana no Sato , Japan
This stunning tunnel of lights is open till March 31, 2013 at the Nabana no Sato , Japan
Photo credit: Tomo Tang
Photo credit: Tairoy
Photo credit: Jeff and Leizel
Photo via: Panda-moniummm
Photo credit: Michle
Amazing Places Photos By National Geographic
Beautiful Night Photography
How Big Is Earth ?
Amazing Snow Sculptures Around the World
1. “Romantic Feelings” measured 115 feet high and 656 feet long. It was built for China’s 2008 Harbin Ice and Snow Festival (Daily Mail).
Photo: EmmaJG
2. Sculpture of the Taj Mahal guarded by a turbaned man at the Sapporo Snow Festival in Hokkaido, Japan.
Photo: Starfires
3. Touching up a sculpture at the 2010 Harbin Ice and Snow Festival in China.
Photo: Irish Typepad
4. Ice Dinosaurs are a centerpiece from the 2004 Sapporo Snow Festival in Japan. The annual festival attracts around 2 million visitors.
Photo: Starfires
5. Owls and birds of prey at the 2009 Sapporo Snow Festival in Hokkaido, Japan.
Photo: Clifford DMello
6. A Native American looking tired but happy at the 2007 Harbin Ice and Snow Festival in China.
Photo: harryalverson
7. Japanese warrior snow sculpture from the 2006 Air Canada Snow Sculpture Challenge in Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, Canada.
Photo: Yukon White Light
8. Man and totem at the 2009 Budweiser International Snow Sculpture Championships in Breckenridge, Colorado.
Photo: future15pic
9. Giant, disembodied snowy hand from 2007 in Mount Prospect, Illinois.
Photo: Harvard Avenue
10. A castle just isn’t a castle without some nudity at the 2008 Harbin Ice and Snow Festival in China.
Photo: StrudelMonkey
11. A bit of India in China at the 2008 Harbin Snow Festival
Photo: StrudelMonkey
12. Hang on! Team USA’s entry for the 2009 Breckenridge International Snow Sculpture Championships.
Photo: david_shankbone
13. Snow train at the 2009 Harbin Ice and Snow festival.
Photo: frankartculinary
14. Lego man in Quebec City, Canada from 2010.
Photo: eytonz
15. 2007′s winning snow sculpture in Breckenridge, Colorado.
Photo: Chris Adams
16. “Butterfly Lovers” from Chinese legend – two lovers who turned into butterflies after committing suicide. A dark story, but a beautiful sculpture at the 2005 Breckenridge Snow Sculpture Festival.
Photo: Adventures in Librarianship
17. A mother bear and her cub at the 2010 Sapporo Snow Festival in Japan.
Photo: David McKelvey
18. A truly international competition in 2010 at the Harbin Snow and Ice Festival China.
Photo: Ivan Walsh
19. An Inuit family in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin at the 2010 US Nationals Snow Sculpting Competition.
Photo: r.darkjoy
20. Tyger, tyger, burning bright. 2010 Harbin Snow and Ice Festival in China.
Photo: eastisrelative
21. Elaborate details in the “National Treasure Inuyama Castle” at the 2008 Sapporo Snow Festival in Japan.
Photo: Christopher Chan
22. Snorkeling in the snow in Anchorage, Alaska at the annual Fur Rondy Festival. It’s a 75+ year tradition that celebrates the miners and trappers of Alaska.
Photo: EmmaJG
2. Sculpture of the Taj Mahal guarded by a turbaned man at the Sapporo Snow Festival in Hokkaido, Japan.
Photo: Starfires
3. Touching up a sculpture at the 2010 Harbin Ice and Snow Festival in China.
Photo: Irish Typepad
4. Ice Dinosaurs are a centerpiece from the 2004 Sapporo Snow Festival in Japan. The annual festival attracts around 2 million visitors.
Photo: Starfires
5. Owls and birds of prey at the 2009 Sapporo Snow Festival in Hokkaido, Japan.
Photo: Clifford DMello
6. A Native American looking tired but happy at the 2007 Harbin Ice and Snow Festival in China.
Photo: harryalverson
7. Japanese warrior snow sculpture from the 2006 Air Canada Snow Sculpture Challenge in Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, Canada.
Photo: Yukon White Light
8. Man and totem at the 2009 Budweiser International Snow Sculpture Championships in Breckenridge, Colorado.
Photo: future15pic
9. Giant, disembodied snowy hand from 2007 in Mount Prospect, Illinois.
Photo: Harvard Avenue
10. A castle just isn’t a castle without some nudity at the 2008 Harbin Ice and Snow Festival in China.
Photo: StrudelMonkey
11. A bit of India in China at the 2008 Harbin Snow Festival
Photo: StrudelMonkey
12. Hang on! Team USA’s entry for the 2009 Breckenridge International Snow Sculpture Championships.
Photo: david_shankbone
13. Snow train at the 2009 Harbin Ice and Snow festival.
Photo: frankartculinary
14. Lego man in Quebec City, Canada from 2010.
Photo: eytonz
15. 2007′s winning snow sculpture in Breckenridge, Colorado.
Photo: Chris Adams
16. “Butterfly Lovers” from Chinese legend – two lovers who turned into butterflies after committing suicide. A dark story, but a beautiful sculpture at the 2005 Breckenridge Snow Sculpture Festival.
Photo: Adventures in Librarianship
17. A mother bear and her cub at the 2010 Sapporo Snow Festival in Japan.
Photo: David McKelvey
18. A truly international competition in 2010 at the Harbin Snow and Ice Festival China.
Photo: Ivan Walsh
19. An Inuit family in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin at the 2010 US Nationals Snow Sculpting Competition.
Photo: r.darkjoy
20. Tyger, tyger, burning bright. 2010 Harbin Snow and Ice Festival in China.
Photo: eastisrelative
21. Elaborate details in the “National Treasure Inuyama Castle” at the 2008 Sapporo Snow Festival in Japan.
Photo: Christopher Chan
22. Snorkeling in the snow in Anchorage, Alaska at the annual Fur Rondy Festival. It’s a 75+ year tradition that celebrates the miners and trappers of Alaska.
Ten Extreme Places on Earth
1. Highest Point Accessible by Vehicle
photo source |
In Tibet, the stark Semo La road is over 20,000 feet (6.100 m) high and takes you through hauntingly beautiful vistas and a treacherous mountain pass. Word has it that Marsimik La is the highest road on earth; but it all comes down to what one might consider an accessible road. Semo La can be used by vehicles. Authorities believe there may be other, higher roads, even more remote, but so far they have not been documented.
2. The Northernmost Forest
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Lukunsky grove is the northernmost forest extension in the world. Ary-Mas to the west from Lukunsky grove is the northernmost isolated forest island, though located approximately 6 kilometres more to the south. The only tree-form species of Lukunsky grove is Dahurian larch, but in total there are 268 species of plants, 78 species of birds, and 16 species of mammals. The species composition shows that Lukunsky grove is rather a part of taiga and not tundra. Separate Dahurian larch trees grow up to 5 - 7 metres tall. The Lukunsky grove forms a northern part of wider forest massif extending for hundreds of kilometres to the south.
3. Deepest Ice on Earth
photo source |
The Bentley Subglacial Trench in Antarctica is phenomenally thick ice, going 8,383 feet (2.555 m) deep. It’s the lowest point on earth that isn’t covered by ocean (-2,555 meters (-8,383 ft)) , but the honor still goes to the Dead Sea for lowest point, as the Dead Sea is technically “on” land and the Bentley Trench is technically covered with water (ice). The trench is the same size as Mexico.
4. Greatest Vertical Drop
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Mount Thor, in Auyuittuq National Park on Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada, presents a 4,100 ft (1.250 m) pure vertical drop. Mt. Thor is Canada’s most famous peak, and it’s made of pure granite. It’s a favorite of thrill seekers and climbers. There have been a few recent rappel expeditions, with one fatality in 2006.
5. Oceanic Pole of Inaccessibility
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source Ten Extreme Places on Earth, Nice n Funny
6. Officially Highest Permanent Settlement
La Rinconada is a city in the Peruvian Andes located near a gold mine. It is considered to be the highest city in the world. The city is located in the Ananea District, San Antonio de Putina Province. It lies at a height of 5,100m (16,732.28 feet) above sea level. Near La Rinconada there is the Laguna La Rinconada. The population has grown from the year 2001 to 2009 by 235% to 30,000 inhabitants. But, unofficially, highest permanent settlement is Kungi village in India (5.219 meters or 17.122 ft).
7. The Windiest Place on Earth
Commonwealth Bay is officially listed in the Guinness Book of World Records and the Eighth Edition of the National Geographic Atlas as being the windiest place on Earth – and to make matters even worse, it’s located in Antarctica. Forget about the occasional gust, the winds at Commonwealth Bay are strong, steady, and blow at 150 mph (240 km/h) – or more.
Australian antarctic explorer Douglas Mawson established the main base of the 1912 Australasian Antarctic Expedition expedition at Cape Denison, at the mouth of Commonwealth Bay. Presumably he did this on a rare windless day; otherwise he must have been insane.
8. The Flattest Place on Earth
Bolivia’s Salar de Uyuni was formed from several prehistoric lakes that converged and dried, leaving a salt pan several feet thick or more over a 4,086 sq mi (10,582 sq km) expanse. Think of Utah’s Bonneville Salt Flats multiplied by 25 and you’ll get an idea of how large the Salar de Uyuni is. Certain rare elements are concentrated in the various salts that make up the Salar, especially the strategic metal Lithium – up to 70 percent of the world’s lithium reserves are locked in the Salar’s salts!
Normally dry and virtually lifeless, the Salar de Uyuni comes alive each November when summer rains attract flocks of pink flamingos, who feed on red algae and brine shrimp. At these times, the Salar becomes even flatter – in effect, it becomes a virtual mirror orbiting satellites use to calibrate their distance measurements.
9. Highest Navigable Lake
Lake Titicaca is a lake located on the border of Peru and Bolivia. It sits 3,811 m (12,500 ft) above sea level, making it the highest commercially navigable lake in the world. By volume of water, it is also the largest lake in South America (Lake Maracaibo has a larger surface area, but it is often disregarded as it is directly connected to the sea).
Titicaca is notable for a population of people who live on the Uros, a group of 44 or so artificial islands made of floating reeds (totora, a reed that abounds in the shallows of the lake). These islands have become a major tourist attraction for Peru, drawing excursions from the lakeside city of Puno. Their original purpose was defensive, and they could be moved if a threat arose. Many of the islands contain watchtowers largely constructed of reeds.
10. Hottest Place to Live
At a thermal vent 3 km below the surface in the equatorial Atlantic, Census researchers found shrimp on the edge of fluids billowing from Earth’s core at this unprecedented marine recording. This is a temperature that would melt lead easily. Although the species resemble those around other vents, scientists want to study how, surrounded by near-freezing 2ºC water, their chemistry allows them to withstand heat bursts that approach the boiling point – up to 80ºC. Pre-cooked for your convenience!
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7. The Windiest Place on Earth
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8. The Flattest Place on Earth
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9. Highest Navigable Lake
photo source |
Uros Islands - Titicaca Lake photo source |
10. Hottest Place to Live
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